THE MICHIGAN DAILY SATURDAY, JULY 2, 1938 Airplane Safety: An Improveent... W IAT with the ever increasing auto- mobile accident rate and the sensa- tional publicity given to airplane crashes, it is encouraging to note that the past year has seen a great advance in aircraft passenger safe- ty quietly parried on by the American air trans- port system. In recognition of the millions of passenger miles flown without accidents during 1937, the National Safety Council recently awarded cer- tificates of commendation to four airline com- panies. Records cited by the Safety Council show a steady improvement by all domestic air- lines. During 1936 air transport operators flew 435,740,253 passenger miles with but one pas- senger fatality for each 9,903,188 miles; a total of fourty-four passengers being killed. In 1937 476,603,165 passengers were flown, with a pas- senger fatality rate of one passenger to 11,- 915,079 miles flown. The total passenger fa- tality rate .was fourty. Since 1930, the rate of fatal accidents per passenger mile has been re- duced 84 per cent, the council reports. For flying 249,912,932 passenger miles without a passenger fatality in 1937, American Airlines received the first certificate. Eastern Airlines, which won first award in 1936, was credited with 180,082,419 passenger miles. Northwest Airlines was credited with 67,485,872 passenger miles without a fatality and Pennsylvania Central, with 50,393,125. Implying that full publicity for all accidents was the best means of bringing shortcomings to light and correcting them, chairman of the awards committee, Harry F. Guggenheim re- quested that "reporters be allowed on the scene and that photographers be permitted to take as many pictures as they please." By handling airplane news in a sane and rea- sonable manner, the press can do much to create a favorable public relatios service both to the airlines and to the air traveler. In the past, sensational build-ups about air crashes have retarded airline development and a self-sustain- ing passenger service. That the confidence of the airlines and the traveling public has not been destroyed is evidenced by the fine perform- ance of our air transport system in the past year. -Monroe T. Schwartz. Ji'fecin itoe H-eywood, Broun, It is surprising and somehow sad to learn that George Bernard Shaw is at last in the hands of the doctors. I don't think the physicians will do the old gentleman any harm. Indeed, Mrs. Shaw is quoted as saying that the injections which he has been receiving for "serious ane- mia" have been most bene- ficial. But I trust that the medical men in putting iron S4into the veins of the sceptic will refrain from pressing iron into his soul. One is justified in assum- ing that the rules drawn up by the consultants have the same percentage of hyperbole as is to be found sometimes in the polemics of the patient. "Don't answer the telephone" should be wel- come advice. Indeed, I know a newspaper man who would like to get a copy of that prescrip-. tion. But "Don't read controversial topics in newspapers" must have been devised by some medico wholly ignorant of the practices of An- glo-American journalism. This rule, if literally applied, would limit Mr. Shaw to a daily pe- rusal of the rugger and the cricket scores. And "Don't write articles" in the case of Shaw is almost like tipping him the black spot. It is to be hoped that, like more experienced patients, he will swallow no pellet without first adding sev- eral grains of salt to the mixture. * * * Fourscore And Two The fact that the great man's blood begins to run a little thin can hardly be used as an argu- ment against his vegetarianism. His eighty-sec- ond birthday falls in July, and he has spent a full sixty of his years in fighting for causes which were good or seemed to him good. I think that posterity is likely to decide that most of his cam- paigns came under the former head. It is inev- itable that his circulatory system grows a little weary. And yet I am torn by conflicting emotions in the face of the fact that the veteran doubter has been compelled to surrender. And it is a surrender when Shaw calls a doctor in or con- sents to have one called. I hope that the physician who answered the summons allowed the old warrior to keep his side arms and retain a team of mules. I must admit that rough jus- tice is done in this particular Appomattox, for Shaw's stubborn resistance to the advance of medical research has been compounded out of ignorance. He is not a scientist, and he is a sentimentalist. His plays and his prefaces have given a great deal of comfort to those cults which would do away with animal experimentation. These groups generally call themselves anti-vivisectionists, which misinterprets the issue right at the begin- ning. The men and women who would cripple the work of the great experimental laboratories are utterly sincere, although that hurts rather than helps. One might think that recent discoveries and advances in preventive medicine would lift the research man beyond the reach of lay hecklers. I have specifically in mind the almost miracu- lous acceleration of the fight against venereal disease. It is no longer fantastic to look to its' eradication within a decade. And from Ehrlich down to the development of fever therapy ani- mal experimentation was absolutely essential. * * * ' The Function Of The Guinea Pig When the next great hospital is built I sug- gest that a monument to the guinea pig be placed in the courtyard. He certainly has done his part to prolong the life of man. There is no dissent at all among research workers in all lands that animal experimentation is necessary if scientific medicine is to progress. The anti-medical groups used to arg'ue that the whole germ theory was a hoax invented by the "medical trust" for private profit. But the element of private profit has been eliminated in the Soviets and the germ theory still remains, and medical theories and practices are funda- mentally the same as in the countries where private initiative flourishes. worldly character. Thep we may feel more like allowing it to join the present distinguished group of campus buildings. -Don C. Cozad d, '39. DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN publication in the Bulletin is constructive notice to all members of the University. Copy received at the office of the Summer Session until 3:30; 11:00 am Saturday until 3:30; 11:00 a.m. on Saturday. SATURDAY, JULY 2, 1938 VOL. XLVIII NO. 6 Last performance of ARMS AND THE MAN, tonight at 8:30 in Lydia Mendelssohn theatre. Last day to buy season tickets at $3.75, $3.25, $2.75. Box office open all day, phone 6300. Candidates now registered in the Bureau of Appointments and Occu- pational Information should call at the office of the Bureau this week to make out location blanks and bring their records up to date. Office hours 9-12 and 2-4, 201 Mason Hall; Sat- urday 9-12. University Bureau of Appoint- ments and Occupational In- formation. All out-of-town members of the AmericaneFederationsof Teachers in attendance at the summer session are requested to send their name address, and telephone number to H. W. Matzke, 1422 Pontiac St. im- mediately._ Graduate Outing Club: There will be a meeting of the Graduate Outing Club at Lane Hall, Sunday, July 3 at 2:30. At this time an organization will be set up for the summer. All persons interested please come out. Summer Session Chorus: Report at 7:15 p.m. Sunday, July 3, to Rack- ham Building, left side section near stage. ."for Vesper services. Excursion No. 3 will be to Green- field Village- instead of to the Ford Plant, as originally scheduled for Wednesday, July 6. The trip to the Ford Plant has been postponed to Wednesday. July 13. The Intramural Sports Building will be closed all day Monday, July 4, 1938. Because of the Fourth of July holi- day the extension classes in golf and swimming will not meet on Monday. The class in swimming will be held on Tuesday evening, from 7 to 8; and the class in golf will meet on Wednes- day at 5 p.m. Lectures in Protein Chemistry: Dr. Max Bergmann,, Member of the Rockefeller Institute for Medical Re- search, will lecture at 2:00 p.m., July 5-8 inclusive, in Room 303 Chemistry Building. The subjects of the four lectures are as follows: July 5-Synthesis and Degrada- tion of Peptides. Chemical Analysis of Proteins (Method). July 6-Chemical Analysis of Pro- teins (Results). July 7-Enzymatic Proteolysis. The I Specificity of Proteinases. t July 8-Synthetic Action of Pro- teolytic Enzymes. The Activation oft Intracellular Proteinases. Mr. George G. Wilson, professor ofP Internationalv Law, of Harvard Uni-t versity will speak on Tuesday at 8 o'clock p.m., July 5th, in the small] lecture room, third floor of the Rack-} ham Building. His subject will bel War Declared and the Use of Force. This lecture is open to the public. Registration: A registration meet-; ing for all students who wish to en- roll with the Bureau for positions,1 will be held by Dr. Puroom in Natural1 Science Auditorium at 4:15 on Tues-; day, July 5th. The Bureau has both Teaching and General Placement Divisions, and this meeting includes people who wish to enroll in either department. This applies to. new re- gistrants only and notk to those who .have been previously enrolled. University Bureau of Appoint- ments and Occupational In- formation Rotarians in Summer Session: All Rotarians enrolled in the Summer Session are invited to meet the mem- bers of the Ann Arbor Rotary Club at a Get-Together and Smoker at the Michigan Union Tuesday evening att 7 o'clock. They are also urged to join the Ann Arbor Club in welcoming the delegates to the Conference on In- ternational Service at the noonday luncheon in the Ball Room of the Michigan Union, Wednesday at 12:15 their wives are also invited to come and meet the wives of the Ann Arbor Rotarians. The address will be given by Prof. John B. Appleton of Pomona University, Claremont, California, on "Nationalism versus International- ism." In the evening, with their wives, they are cordially invited to attend the reception tendered the foreign students of the University, the delegates to the Conference and the students and faculty of the In- stitute of Far Eastern Studies at the Michigan League. At 8 o'clock, the Chinese students will present a pro- gram of music and pantomine in the Ball Room of the League, to be followed at 9:15 by an informal re- ception in the Grr 'vi Rapids Room. All Rotarians are urged to leave their names and addresses in doom 9, Uni- versity Hall. Summer Session French Club: The next meeting of the Club will talze place Thursday, July 7, at 8:00 p.m. at "Le Foyer Francais", 1414 Wash- tenaw. Mr. James O'Neill of the Romance (Continued on Page 3) N SClassified Directory The Editor Gsets Told. FOR RENT-Single or double room for graduate women. 514 Monroe. Phone 22737 24x FOR RENT-Study and bedroom in private home, suitable for two men. 707 Church St 23x ROOM - Two large third-floor rooms, single or double, with cross- ventilation and skylights, large closets, ample parking space - graduate students or business peo- ple. The Haunted Tavern. 417 E. Huron. Phone 7781 22x ROOMS-1003 E. Huron, $2.50 week. Near campus and hospital. Show- ers. Water in every room. Boys and married couples preferred. Phone 3201. 12x LAUNDRY: 2-1044. Sox darned. Careful work at low price. 5x SILVER LAUNDRY-We call for and deliver. Bundles individually done, no markings. All work guaranteed. Phone 5594, 607 E. Hoover. 3x TYPING: Neatly and accurately done. Mrs. Howarj, 613 Hill St. Dial 5244. 2x VIOLA STEIN-Experienced typist, Reasonable rates. 706 Oakland, Phone 6327. 17x. STUDENT LAUNDRY. Shirts 12c. Call for and deliver. Phone 4863 for other prices. lx FOR RENT-Completely furnished apartment with private bath and shower. Also large double room. Phone 8544. 422 E. Washington. 20x. LOST: White crocheted purse in Ann *Arbor Savings and Commercial Bank, University Branch. Tel. 6515. Reward. 27x WANTED-ride to Boston or enroute immediately. Call 2-3317. 26x WANTED-Student to work for room in private home. Phone 2-2891. 25x FOR RENT-Desirable suite and bedroom. Light housekeeping privi- lege. 3 blocks southeast campus. 928 Oakland. Phone 5740. N Gilt-Edged Education To the Editor: Yes, since when has the University of Michi- gan slipped below its deserved dignity to allow such a show-house as the Rackham building to be erected on its campus? I have gradually dur- ing the years come to feel a sincere pride in the University, its name, what it stands for. I have been proud of its old buildings and its new ones -proudest of all of the Main Library because its function, I believe, is the most important of any building on thecampus. I have been proud of the Yost field house, thelntramural sports building -have boasted .to outsiders thatno better fa- cilities for all sports exist in the United States. The Law buildings, Angell Hall, are beautiful in architectural design. THEY DON'T STRIKE A BRASS NOTE. It is because they co not go be- yond the bounds of propriety, of good taste. I have never been in a more beautiful and im- pressive interior than the main study hall of the Main Library., It is beautiful because its de- sign is founded on good taste. I am ashamed of the Rackham building, ashamed of this shoddy plebe, who arrayed like some barbaric prince in costly glittering tinsel. seems to have come a long way to a civilized place, where he stands boldly, facing the quiet and scholarly Library. (An English name was even imported, ''Mall," for old Ingalls Street). So don't gasp, you Summer Session people; don't slobber, as I have already heard you, guides, at the luxurious appointments of the show-baby, the platinum-blonde chorus girl, the Rackham building. Some of us Regular Session students feel like proposing that a high board fence be built from the Burton Memorial Tower extend- ing to the Grad building, enclosing both-that the Grad building, its luxurious appointments, be left open to the transient freight-train travel- ers, the Knights of the Road who come by Ann Arbor, who may in a course of years wear off and batter some of the cheap gold leaf and wear thin the T-Bone thick carpets till the splendor is ground off-till the building has developed a I N 11 Realism-Chamberlain Style x. The British Conservatives still have a safe majority, but the opposition steadily grows more impressive. Now Viscount Cecil follovs the Duchess of Atholl in refusing to serve as the Government whip, or even to let himself be considered a nominal supporter of a Ministry whose Spanish policy he calls "inconsistent with British honor and international morality." These are harsh words, but Lord Cecil is an idealist who has long been president of the British League of Nations Union and has not lost faith in the principles on which the League was founded. Holding these views, a man of such firm integrity was almost certain sooner or later' to be forced into the opposition, and the Govern- ment's toleration of the bombing of British ships carrying cargoes to republican Spain seems to have been the last straw. Prime Minister Chamberlain, on the contrary, is n r-m+An~r lafnrl i-, avlfir.n nie vn ernment treated as idle rumor reports of in- creased Italian aid for Gen. Franco, and when even official eyes could no longer be blind to the evidence, the new aid given was held not "materi- ally" to affect the situation. Only a few days ago, Sir Robert Hodgson, British agent at rebel headquarters, said the British Government was "inclined"to believe that the aviators taking part in recent bombing outrages were all Spaniards, adding the strange explanation that "it is ob- viously not in the best interests either of Italy or of Germany to allow their volunteer airmen to attack shipping." That attitude enables the British Government to shirk raising so ticklish a question at Rome. But can it fairly be called realism? Just as Rome in due time boasted of the tri- umphs of the Italian troops in Spain, whose participation had been denied, so it, is now boasting, according to a disnatch from Paris, of r. 11 I a